Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 129South Africa
Nkosi v Mazwai (14182/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 129 (10 March 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
10 March 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Nkosi v Mazwai (14182/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 129 (10 March 2022)
Nkosi v Mazwai (14182/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 129 (10 March 2022)
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SAFLII
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personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 14182/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISD.
NO
In
the matter between:
THEMBA
MBONGENI
NKOSI
Applicant
(Identity
Number: [....])
And,
NONTSIKELELO
MAZWAI
Respondent
(Identity
Number: [....])
JUDGMENT
FISHER
J:
Introduction
[1]
This
is part B of an application launched in two parts by the applicant on
23 March 2021. Part A of the application was dealt with
in the urgent
court before Wright J and an order was granted on an interim basis
pending the final determination of part B. In
essence the matter
involves comments disseminated on social media which are alleged to
be about the applicant and defamatory. The
applicants now seeks a
final interdict preventing further defamatory utterances on social
media and generally.
Background
[2]
The
applicant is currently unmarried and the father of five children
aged, seven, five, three, three, and one years old. He is a
public
figure, more commonly known as
DJ
Euphonik
, and is well known in the
radio and television industry. He currently has 210 000 followers on
Instagram and is active and enjoys
a prominent presence on social
media. He makes his living in the music industry and his social media
presence is part of the marketing
of what refers to as his ‘brand’.
[3]
The
respondent holds herself out as a musician, poet, and human rights
activist who is well known for her role in campaigning against
gender-based violence in South Africa. At the time that part A was
heard the respondent had 14 200
Instagram
followers and 269 700
Twitter
followers. Both
Instagram
and
Twitter
are dominant international social media platforms.
[4]
On
11 March 2021, the respondent retweeted ( i.e. republished on the
platform) a post
Twitter)
a message purportedly posted by an entity with the
Twitter
‘handle’ (i.e.an identifying nom de plume) -
Women
For Change
. The original tweet ( i.e. a
term for a message posted on the media platform) urged certain DJs to
not perform with the applicant
to ‘show every survivor of
Gender Based Violence’ their ‘respect and support.’
the tweet included the hashtag
sign (a manner of signposting a topic
on
Twitter
and other media platforms) ‘
#muteeuphonik’
.
[5]
On
the same day, the Respondent posted the following message on
Twitter
:
‘
If you
wanna see the other rapists watch who is rallying behind other
rapists…’
‘
When
djs put each other on lineups its like an an invitation to rape the
groupies party …’
[6]
The
respondent was then asked her thoughts on the DJ known as
Black
Coffee’
booking the applicant in
the line-up for his birthday party. In response she retweeted a post
by an entity with the handle ‘
What's
Hot Africa’
which read ‘birds
of a feather flock together’. The applicant alleges that this
is a reference to certain unproven
allegations contained in
acrimonious divorce proceedings in which
Black
Coffee
is involved.
[7]
On 12 March 2021, the respondent tweeted
the following post:
‘
There
is now an event on Sunday with a known rapist and a known domestic
abuser on the lineup. And you will rally and clap hands
like a bunch
of monkeys who can't tell right from wrong."
"A
gig with predators and violent men in the lineup. Nice.’
Discussion
[8]
Whilst
it appears that the Respondent has purposefully attempted to avoid
directly naming the applicant, the only reasonable inference
to be
drawn from her various posts is that her comments/statements are
directed, inter alia, at him.
[9]
Any
person who has substantial social media following and who is able, as
a consequence thereof to reach out to and influence, a
large
community of people, as the respondent is able to do, is required to
ensure that they exercise temperance and responsibility
in the
dissemination of public posts. More importantly, the respondent ought
to ensure that her public statements are based and
founded in truth
and in fact.
[1]
[10]
What
one observes here is a garnering by the respondent of resources in
the form of her influence in the public media to create
a string of
posts which when read together reveal that she is spreading a rumour
to the effect that the applicant is a sexual predator
and as such
should be ‘muted’ in the industry and not allowed to
appear on line-ups for music events. The test for
determining whether
the words in respect of which there is a complaint have a defamatory
meaning, is whether a reasonable person
of ordinary intelligence
might reasonably understand the words concerned to convey a meaning
defamatory of the litigant concerned.
[2]
[11]
The posts are on an
application of this test clearly defamatory.
[12]
Publication
of a defamatory statement is prima facie wrongful and the onus rests
on the Respondent to dispel the prima facie case.
[3]
[13]
The respondent
denies that the tweets are defamatory. They do, however, speak for
themselves and this contention is rejected. Counsel
for the
respondent was unable to tender any alternative and non-defamatory
meaning as to the tweets.
[14]
It is raised also
by the respondent that there is a material non-joinder in that the
entity ‘Woman for Change’. There
is no merit in this
submission. Indeed, it is not even clear that such an entity exists.
Costs
[15]
The respondent is
no stranger to this type of litigation. She has already been
restrained from making similar public statements
under Case Number
16531/2020, which pertains to another DJ.
[16]
Furthermore, she
had costs awarded against her on a punitive scale in part A of this
application. She was also afforded an opportunity
by the applicant’s
attorneys to redress and cease her conduct prior to the launching of
the application. She stubbornly elected
not to do so and rather has
proceeded to defend the matter. It is clear that she doggedly defends
her position without any cogent
basis. Her behaviour in relation to
this litigation borders on the contemptuous.
[17]
The platforms for
social activism in the realm of Gender Based Violence must not be
abused. The irresponsible use of such platforms
inure to the
detriment of this important movement for change and does not assist.
[18]
In the
circumstances the respondent is directed to pay the costs of part B
of the application on the scale as between attorney and
client.
Order
[19]
I thus make an
order in terms of the draft which appears at 074-5 of Caseline
FISHER
J
HIGH
COURT JUDGE
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of Hearing:
19 January 2022.
Judgment
Delivered:
10 March 2022.
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicant
:
Adv M Nowitz.
Instructed
by
:
Schindlers Attorneys.
For
the Respondent
:
Adv P Seseane.
Instructed
by
:
Stephina Motlhamme Attorneys.
[1]
See:
Manuel
v Economic Freedom Fighters and Others
2019 5 SA 210
GJ at paras 61 to 72.
[2]
Mthembi-Mahanyele
v Mail & Guardian Ltd and Anothe
r
2004(6) SA 329 (SCA) at para 25.
[3]
Neethling
v Du Preez
[1993] ZASCA 203
;
1994 (1) SA 708
(A) at 769 —780;
National
Media Ltd v Bogoshi
1998 (4) SA 1196(SCA).
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